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GROUNDHOG RHYTHMS By
Sean
Henahan, Access Excellence
ITHACA, N.Y. (2/1/97)
Aside from predicting the coming Spring, the extraordinary
sleeping and waking habits of the groundhog may help researchers
better understand the effect of biorhythms on everything from
fat metabolism, thyroid function, carcinogenesis and brain
function.
Groundhogs (Marmota monax) , also known as woodchucks,
experience some of the most dramatic annual biological rhythms
of any mammal. The groundhog's reproductive activity, food
intake, basal metabolism, body fat and total body weight change
considerably with the seasons.
Throughout the year, the animals vary their daily food intake by
2,000 percent, and both their body weight and metabolic rates
increase up to 100 percent and then decline by 50 percent.
Patrick W. Concannon, Ph.D., an endocrinologist and reproductive
biologist in the Department of Physiology in Cornell's College
of Veterinary Medicine, believes that most mammals, including
humans, have similar annual cycles. These cycles, he believes,
are driven by hormonal signals, synchronized by annual changes
in photoperiod, and influence functions such as metabolism,
reproduction, hair growth and fat deposition.
"The woodchuck may be the best mammalian species to study the
underlying biological mechanisms of circannual cycles because
its large body size allows collection of blood and tissue
samples of adequate size, and we have already determined the
husbandry, dietary and housing conditions to maintain it as a
laboratory animal model in closed colonies with high rates of
reproduction," Concannon said.
Previous research has shown that the seasonal cycles of
groundhogs do not vary when exposed to either short or long
days. Concannon and colleagues may have figured out why.
"We have found that woodchucks have very powerful endogenous
cycles," Concannon said. "In other words, they undergo a series
of seasonal changes which trigger one another and involve about
a one-year cycle, even when there are no light cues to entrain
them to 12 months."
He also has determined that the woodchuck cycles can be
influenced by photoperiods but only if nature is mimicked more
closely and the animals are exposed each day to a slightly
longer or shorter day. By exposing the woodchucks to
computer-controlled lighting, with gradually lengthening or
gradually shortening "days," Concannon has been able to entrain
woodchucks to a circannual cycle as if they were living in
Australia or South America and another group of woodchucks to an
8-month year.
Concannon's studies have been the first to conclusively
demonstrate that the endogenous circannual cycle in these
animals, and probably in all temperate species, are entrained by
photoperiods and that daily changes in light are more critical
than day length.
The endogenous cycles of the woodchuck are so strong that even
in the laboratory, where the temperature is maintained at 70
degrees year-round with ample food and water, some woodchucks
still stop eating and hibernate because of the underlying
biology of the circannual cycle, Concannon said.
"And guess when they stop hibernating? Right around Groundhog
Day in early February," he said. He suspects that their urge to
hibernate is driven by decreasing 'day-length' but that the
effectiveness of short days (or even total darkness underground)
wears off over time. When that happens, the processes are
reversed, and the rodents emerge from hibernation with a very
healthy appetite and high energy, which are further stimulated
by the increasing day lengths that occur in late winter and
spring.
"The implications of better understanding these circannual
rhythms is very significant for human medicine," said Concannon,
who pointed out that recent research clearly suggests that
humans have circannual cycles, although not as profound as those
in the woodchuck. "These cycles include changes in blood
chemistry during the year and changes in hormone secretion. Our
cycles, like those of woodchucks, are most likely also entrained
by photoperiod, although such entrainment may be less than
precise due to our exposure to artificial lighting schedules at
home, work and play."
Concannon hopes that, by studying the profound circannual
changes in body function in the woodchuck, scientists can better
understand the underlying changes in brain chemistry, body
metabolism and hormone secretion that have evolved as part of
the biology of circannual cycles and that probably exist in most
species. The woodchuck also may provide clues to the basis of
circannual changes in body function that just now are being
recognized in human clinical research. For example, there are
circannual changes in the rate of DNA synthesis and cell
division in bone marrow and intestinal cells in humans, and that
has implications in the use, efficacy and side-effects of
chemotherapy used to treat cancer.
"Clinical studies of blood cells and blood components in humans
have revealed circannual changes in the volume of red blood
cells, hemoglobin, hematocrit, white blood cell function, blood
clotting proteins, tumor marking proteins in cancer patients,
hormone receptors on blood cells, blood protein levels and
cholesterol levels in different blood fractions," Concannon
said. "Human brain activities also show circannual cycles.
Circannual rhythms have been reported for the amount and percent
of REM-sleep, the brain's serotonin-neurotransmitter system, the
occurrence of migraine attacks and even the size of
vasopressin-secreting neurons in the supra chiasmatic nucleus
[the nucleus that appears to control circannual cycles]."
Mental health also has a seasonal component, as seen in the
winter mental depression of seasonal affective disorder (SAD).
Those patients have profound seasonal changes in taste
sensation, appetite and food intake, Concannon said. Normal
individuals also appear to have circannual changes in basal
metabolism, energy level and appetite, as well as in metabolic
hormones like prolactin.
Concannon said that seasonal changes also occur in blood
pressure, the incidence of stroke and the secretion of kidney
and adrenal hormones that most affect blood pressure (renin and
aldosterone). They also exist for the major adrenal stress
hormone (cortisol), thyroid secretion and secretion of the
pituitary hormone that controls the thyroid.
"Even reproductive function has a circannual cycle," Concannon
said. "Men have circannual rhythms in testosterone, pituitary
hormones controlling testis activity, sperm counts and semen
chemistry. Circannual patterns have been reported for the level
of hormone receptors in breast cancer, for the occurrence of
premature births and for the chemistry of the fluid in ovarian
follicles."
Concannon's research appeared recently in Biology of
Reproduction, Laboratory Animal Science and the Journal of
Experimental Zoology.
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